[2003 LETTERS, IN NEWEST TO OLDEST ORDER]
W. Steve
Cochran
December 30, 2003
(Editor's note: This letter was addressed to Denny O'Brien.)
I could not agree with you more (regarding
Pirate Notebook No. 165). I
have said several times that ECU has had approximately 90% of it's
scholarship football players from NC, VA and SC, for the past 40 years.
Since the days of Coach Jack Boone, we have won with players from these
areas. We will not win getting the "leftovers" from Florida.
I support hiring assistant coaches with ECU ties who can recruit from the
above mentioned areas. Pat Dye, Ed Emory, Bill Lewis and Steve Logan won
with players who were predominantly from the Carolinas and Virginia.
Go Pirates!
W. Steve Cochran (ECU '63)
Pinehurst, NC
Gary Coffman
December 27, 2003
Keith LeClair's article (From
The Dugout, 12.25.03) was very insightful. It educated me as
a fan in a way where I could get an inside perspective of the overall
strategies of an ongoing baseball program, something most "season to season"
fans do not get.
Please do the same type of articles on basketball and football as
well. (And archive them for future reference.) I believe this type of
journalism offers real value to your readers.
Thanks again.
Gary Coffman
Palmetto, FL
Jack Snypes
December 26, 2003
In reference to the
Dec. 26 article about Jeff Kerr
becoming the strength coach for the Pirate football team, the comments by
Jeff Connors bother me.
First off, I will forever be indebted
as a Pirate fan for the hard work and dedication Jeff Connors gave us during
his years at ECU. The fact that he is a Pirate Club member speaks even
louder on his behalf. While no one has all the facts on the new position, it
strikes me as self serving chatter by Mr. Connors to question if ECU is
going to de-emphasize football with this move, when UNC-Chapel Hill has
strength coaches for basketball, football and the Olympic Sports.
Has it occurred to Mr. Connors that
maybe, just maybe, ECU is trying to expand its strength program? It's well
known that Jim Whitten is doing a fine job, but he can't do it all and
shouldn't have to.
If Jeff Kerr is qualified, also
questioned by Connors, then he
should be on the short list for the job and ECU should figure out a way to
make it appealing financially. During the 1990's at ECU there is no question
that two of our best motivators were Jeff Connors and Jeff Kerr. Over the
last few years, I haven't felt we had the emotional, in-your-face-leadership
that these two men brought to our program.
We now have the opportunity to get a
great one back. ECU's gain could be Jeff Connors' loss. Let's always be
thankful we had Jeff Connors and let's all get behind Jeff Kerr for this new
position.
Go Pirates!
Jack Snypes (ECU '80)
Charlotte, NC
Jimmy Williams
December 21, 2003
In explaining why he was leaving the
East Carolina football program, Coach Stockstill said that he missed the
85,000 fans on football Saturdays. I'll bet that the ECU faithful won't miss
the 18 points a game Coach Stockstill's anemic offensive scheme generated.
Jimmy Williams (ECU '78)
Swansboro, NC
Julie Corbett
December 21, 2003
A recent quote in the Greenville News
from Rick Stockstill stated that the reason he was leaving ECU was to "be a
part of a big time program." Actually, ECU did have a "big time program"
before he came. I, along with many other fans, am glad to say good riddance
to him, his arrogant attitude, and his lack of skill. USC is an appropriate
place for him.
Julie Corbett
Tamassee, SC
Mark Pickard
December 12, 2003
In regards to Al Myatt's column on a
"Quick Fix" for the Pirates, I for
one hope this isn't the case. As a 22-year fan of the Pirates, I would like
to see a quick fix as much as anyone, but restocking a program with Juco's
with one and two years of eligibility is not the answer.
We should continue to focus on high
school recruits and rebuild this program from the ground up. This may result
in another losing season or two, but I believe the long-term effects will
outweigh any short term win-at-all costs strategy.
We all love the Pirates, but lets be
realistic in our situation, take the long view, and win down the road with
class, and with four-year student athletes. Most quick fixes are fleeting
and short lived. I hope that's not the road we take in Pirate land.
Go Pirates!
Mark Pickard
Raleigh, NC
Mike and
Gay Dougherty
December 7, 2003
(Editor's note: This letter was addressed to Denny O'Brien.)
We read
your article on the All-Star Voting.
We appreciate your support for Ryan and just wanted to let you know. Of
course being his parents we are very proud of Ryan but it is nice to know
that others see his ability and it's not just us. We as parents tend to be
a little biased where our kids are concerned.
Anyway, thank you again for supporting Ryan and also thank Bonesville for
the awesome job they do. Hopefully, J.T. can turn this program around so
next year you will be writing about the amazing turn around! Go Pirates!.
Mike and Gay Dougherty
Parents of #10
Orlando, FL
John B. Dunn,
Jr.
December 8, 2003
This is a response to
Philip Garvin’s letter dated
December 4, 2003. I also agree that
Henry Hinton’s article about the
firing of college coaches is right on point. However, I am appalled that
anyone, especially an ECU graduate, would advocate that ECU fans boycott the
Pirate Club because they object to a coaching change. The Pirate Club is
responsible for assisting with the funding of scholarships awarded to
student athletes — all student athletes, not just football players.
Currently ECU is unable to fully fund
all scholarships allowed by the NCAA for the school’s 16 men’s and women’s
sports. For 2002-03, only 85% of the scholarships allowed by the NCAA were
awarded. The Pirate Club provided the funding for 76% of those scholarships
(approximately $2,700,000). At this time, only football and men’s and
women’s basketball are fully funded. Football is the only sport that makes a
profit. All other sports operate in the red. It is also important to note
that some of the schools ECU currently competes against are fully funded.
Despite the current situation, the
Pirate Club has more than 8,000 members and is on pace to provide almost
$3,000,000 for scholarships in 2003-04. However, the Pirate Club must
continue to grow if ECU is going to compete. Each year it takes more money
to provide the same number of scholarships because these costs increase. If
you want ECU to compete at the highest level you must continue to support
the Pirate Club. If you are an ECU fan and are not a member of the Pirate
Club you should be. You can join for as little as $75. ECU needs your
support now more than ever.
Finally, if you don’t like a decision
made by East Carolina University contact the appropriate people and let them
hear about it. The Chancellor, Athletic Director and members of the Board of
Trustees are all available to you. Let them know how you feel. As ECU grads
we all get frustrated with decisions that are made from time to time because
we have a vested interest in seeing the university succeed. However, if you
really want ECU to field strong athletic teams you must support the Pirate
Club because it supports the student athletes. Without student athletes ECU
can’t compete.
John B. Dunn, Jr. (ECU '86)
President – Pitt County Pirate Club
Greenville, NC
Editor's note: Mr. Dunn's letter exceeds our published guideline that
letters be limited to no more than 350 words. In this case, we made an
exception. Such exceptions for the sake of retaining a letter's theme are
made solely at the discretion of the editor.
Dave Englert
December 8, 2003
Phillip Garvin’s passionate
December 4, 2003 letter concerning a
recent
Henry Hinton article about firing
college coaches has an understandable sentiment but is seriously misguided.
Yes, many ECU fans wish Steve Logan had not been fired. I include myself
in that group. However, withholding funds from the Pirate Club will not
bring Logan back. In fact, doing so will only harm the primary goal of all
Pirate Club members, which is to help ECU field competitive teams by funding
scholarships.
The Pirate Club can and should do nothing to influence the hiring and
firing of football coaches. That would lead to perpetual chaos at ECU or any
other institution. No coach of any quality would want to work here under
those conditions, including Logan. The fundraising and “friend” raising done
by the Pirate Club is a full time job, one done quite well by a small staff.
The Chancellor and Athletic Director are responsible for hiring coaches,
and I assume Mr. Garvin is aware these positions are presently vacant. There
is no sense rehashing year old issues involving the firing of Logan, as
those responsible are gone. The Pirate Club did assist with financial
incentives for Logan over many years, but could have done nothing to stop
his firing. I hope Mr. Garvin has not waited all year to make his feelings
known to the Pirate Club, and the total university.
ECU athletics have not been hijacked. Interim Chancellor Shelton is a
strong supporter of our athletic program. Interim Athletic Director Nick
Floyd has quickly restored morale and provided steady leadership to the
department. Searches are underway to identify the best candidates to fill
these critical positions. The Board of Trustees and the Search Committees
are keenly aware of the importance of the ECU athletic program to the
continued growth and perception of our university.
To withhold money from the Pirate Club will only weaken the ECU athletic
program. The decision is wrong, and the message is wrong. The Pirate Club is
about to set records for fundraising and memberships in 2003, and must do so
again in 2004.
Our role as fans is to stand up and be counted as Pirate Club members and
hopefully season ticket holders. Those are concrete and measurable actions
which clearly demonstrate support, and fund the scholarships which allow ECU
to compete. We don’t yet fund all the scholarships allowed by the NCAA, so
we need more Pirate fans to come on board now.
Don’t be blinded by Mr. Garvin’s passionate frustration, or your
disappointment with this past football season. We are a great university and
a great athletic program that has experienced some tough times, but we will
be back in football under John Thompson, and soon. We are the Pirates of
ECU!
Dave Englert (ECU ’75)
Chesapeake, VA
Editor's note: Mr. Englert's letter exceeds our published guideline that
letters be limited to no more than 350 words. In this case, we made an
exception. Such exceptions for the sake of retaining a letter's theme are
made solely at the discretion of the editor.
Philip Garvin
December 4, 2003
I gotta tell you,
Henry Hinton's article about the
firing of college coaches is dead on. For Cincinnati to fire Minter is
ridiculous. For Solich to be fired at Nebraska is stupid. And as we all
know, the firing of Steve Logan was the biggest mistake of all time, and his
subsequent treatment was embarrassing.
A while back, a fan made the case that
the past is the past and we should not pull our funds from the Pirate club
if we are true fans.
That is a bunch of bull####. That is
the one avenue we have to be able to impact Pirate athletics. The Pirate
club, as an organization, has the ability to exert influence on the
chancellor and athletic director.
It is time we let the Pirate club know
that we are unhappy with how the athletics department at East Carolina
University has been handled, and that we are unhappy with the fact that the
Pirate club DID NOTHING TO STOP THE FIRING OF LOGAN.
Now we have the worst football team in
division 1-A. Oh, I'm sorry, Army is 6 points worse than us. That is
something to be proud of.
STOP FUNDING THE PIRATE CLUB and stand
up for those of us who feel that Pirate athletics have been hijacked. I
would urge Cincinnati and Nebraska alumni to do the same.
Philip Garvin (ECU '89)
Cherry Hill, NJ
Tom Roupas
December 4, 2003
This is in response to the
recent news broken by Henry Hinton
that as part of Steve Logan's termination he was banned from East Carolina
University's campus. I believe that Interim Chancellor Shelton should issue
Coach Logan an immediate apology for this ridiculous and uncalled for
banishment, and at the same time issue a directive that the banishment be
lifted TODAY.
Was it not questionable enough that he
was fired after taking ECU to 5 bowl games (including 3 of his last 4
seasons), winning the Liberty Bowl Alliance Championship twice, finishing
second in Conference USA three times, staying at ECU for 14 seasons despite
numerous opportunities to leave, never having a losing record in C-USA,
having one of the highest graduation rates in the country, and running an
impeccably clean program?
What possible rationale could there be
to not allow Coach Logan on campus?
As football coach at East Carolina,
Steve Logan represented everything that is right about college athletics,
and the development of student-athletes. My alma mater needs to rectify this
wrong immediately.
Tom Roupas (ECU '84)
Fayetteville, NC
Steve Brock
November 9, 2003
ECU stayed an independent many years in
hopes of entering the Big East conference. When those doors didn't open, we
joined Conference USA — and even without a football conference championship,
I don't think that anyone would argue that we have been very successful in
our current conference over the years.
Now that the landscape has shifted —
both from a conference and ECU administration standpoint — I believe it is
time to set our sights to greater heights. I'm talking of none other than
one of the premier football conferences in the country — the SEC.
No, it will not happen overnight, and
certainly our recent football records don't help with our case. But some
things are already lining up in that direction — the new football coaches
and their ties to this conference. The SEC could also benefit by adding one
more state to its territory. Vanderbilt would be an excellent target for
replacement.
I propose this as the vision that
should be cast.
I'm looking forward to the next few
years, with a new Conference USA football championship game. But I'm also
looking to the day when we can open up the paper and it says 'ECU Joins
SEC.' Then, we'll see the Big East and ACC teams scrambling to get onto our
schedule!
Next steps? We have 2 key positions — a
chancellor and an athletic director — which could be filled with SEC
influentials. We could also take a renewed focus on scheduling SEC teams
such as South Carolina — a former rivalry which would not take much to be
rekindled.
Steve Brock (ECU '88)
Apex, NC
Jon Rogers
November 5, 2003
To say that letting Steve Logan go was
a big mistake by East Carolina University is to make a huge understatement.
I need not remind everyone of what Logan accomplished while at ECU, but I
will take a moment to do just that.
Logan took the team to five bowl games
and posted wins over BCS schools Miami, Syracuse, South Carolina, Texas
Tech, Stanford, West Virginia, Wake Forest, Duke, NC State, Temple,
Pittsburgh, and Virginia Tech. Meanwhile, he led the team to winning records
within Conference USA every year. In addition, let us not forget that Texas
Christian University has won 18 of its last 19 games. The only flaw on that
record... East Carolina under head coach Steve Logan.
Despite losing such a talented coach
and leader, the Pirate Nation must not focus on things they have no control
over. Instead, Pirate fans must concentrate on doing what they have always
done... exhibiting a level of pride and enthusiasm in their team that
everyone else notices. Though this year has been quite frustrating, we must
look at the promising future that lies ahead for ECU football.
Next year, East Carolina will see the
return of Art Brown at tailback.
Marvin Townes will also return and he has proved that he can be a threat
receiving. The vertical passing game will look to get better as Desmond
Robinson and Paul Troth will have to compete with James Pinkney, Patrick
Dosh (Florida Gator transfer), and a high school blue-chip recruit from
Olympic High School in Charlotte. In addition, Juwon Crowell will be given
the chance to develop as a wideout. If he's anything like his brother
(Germaine Crowell, Detroit Lions), then we have a lot to smile about.
We have lost a lot, and we are all
suffering from the loss of Coach Logan, the snub by the Big East, and the
setbacks on the field. But we have a promising future in a very nicely
reorganized conference that centers around football. The Pirates will
return, I have no doubt about that...
I just hope that return will be ushered
in by passionate fans.
Jon Rogers (ECU '01)
Alexandria, VA
Andy Bayliss
November 5, 2003
In response to
Robert W. McDowell's letter dated
November 3, 2003, I hope he doesn't come back. I may not agree with all of
the changes and recent decisions made by the past or current administration
or staff, but one thing is not going to change. My degree came from East
Carolina University and I am damn proud of it. I am a Pirate and will always
be a Pirate. My contributions of time and money to the support of the
university are for the betterment of the school and its students.
This is the time we need to bond
together and see this ship thru this stormy period. Not come out and play
only when the forecast is clear.
I for one am sick of hearing people
make comments like "I am not giving any more money to the Pirate Club"
because of the coach's decisions or their favorite player not starting. If
this was the case, you should have been giving your money to the Steve Logan
Fund instead of the Pirate Club. Why punish the university for decisions
that you may not agree on? We do not need your "closet fan" type of support.
And you, sir, are no True Pirate.
The "Dumber Cluck" has been discovered.
Andy Bayliss (ECU '86)
New Bern, NC
Robert W. McDowell
November 3, 2003
After East Carolina's all-too-familiar
second-half collapse against Memphis, Coach John Thompson said the Tigers
must have "smelled blood." ... J.T., the Pirates' 2003 opponents smell blood
when the first Pirate steps off the team bus outside the stadium.
This is a CRIPPLED team, one that
Thompson has deliberately HAMSTRUNG by stubbornly insisting on starting last
year's backup quarterback in every game, no matter how badly he plays.
Rather than build this year's team around the strengths of the returning
players, Thompson has chosen to ignore those strengths and subject Pirate
Nation to an ENTIRELY UNNECESSARY season of grief and pain.
This fact alone should cost him his
job.
Benching Paul Troth — and thereby
guaranteeing an uncompetitive season — is just the biggest bonehead move of
Thompson's disastrous tenure. Calling two timeouts at the end of the
Louisville game, down TWO scores, is another. 250 words is not enough to
list the myriad instances of arrogance and stupidity that have characterized
the Thompson tenure.
If there is a dumber cluck coaching in
Division 1-A, I don't know who it is.
What I do know is that, at the most
important time in its football history, East Carolina is NONCOMPETITIVE,
even against mediocre teams. All the grudging respect that it took the
Pirates decades to earn is gone. ECU is once again the punchline for a Brent
Musburger joke — or worse.
As a Pirate Club member and long-time
football season-ticket holder, I, for one, have had ENOUGH. If John Thompson
returns in 2004, I won't.
Robert W. McDowell (ECU '70)
Raleigh, NC
Stephen Dew
October 26, 2003
Concerning
Mr. Easley's input to our conference
affiliation:
Every person interested in the well
being of ECU and eastern NC should be insulted and gravely concerned that
our governor decided to speak up on ECU's behalf to the Big East but
remained silent to the ACC.
It certainly seems to underscore the
second class citizen feeling that eastern NC and ECU have.
Stephen Dew (ECU '86)
Kernersville, NC
Dan Antonelli
October 14, 2003
In reference to
Greg Zittel's letter,
why don't we go ahead and blame Steve Logan for the war in Iraq? After all,
Logan was the guilty party who plagued East Carolina with was several
winning seasons and bowl bids. Not to mention, his devilish propensity to
send players to the NFL. Damn him. The nerve of Logan, to believe in the
athletes that North Carolina produces and dare to take on the rest of the
country with them.
It was so hard to "bare" trips to play Miami, only to watch the Pirates
win the games. Logan had no guts. I mean, during Hurricane Floyd, he only
rallied a group of young men, some of whom lost their homes, to back to back
wins over South Carolina and Miami. ECU actually won an Espy that year for
that victory against adversity. How could you remember that though, because
the introspective Logan rarely tooted his own horn.
Enough with the sarcasm. While I completely support Coach John Thompson
and the current staff at ECU, I can not let Logan bashers go on without
defending a coach that gave me and them incredible memories. How short are
their memories? Do they not recollect what it was like before Logan? Other
than that special 1991 season, when Logan served as offensive coordinator
and mentor to Jeff Blake, the Pirates had not produced a winning season
since 1983 and had averaged about 3.6 wins per year during that period.
Logan as a head coach gave us great years — as well as his heart, soul,
and his loyalty. This in a profession where upward mobility is the name of
the game and "get it when you can" reigns supreme. Logan decided to stay in
Greenville and stitch some fabric. For the fans and players, he was truly a
"what you see is what you get" type of guy. And what we got from Logan was
an enormous contribution to the substance and success of the program.
I will conclude with a quote worth remembering:
"A devil
you do know is better than a devil you don't."
Dan Antonelli (ECU '96)
Raleigh, NC
Greg Zittel
October 13, 2003
Teresa Morris's letter missed
one salient point. While she calls for a grassroots effort to bring back
Steve Logan, she doesn't get that Logan's demise was brought about by a
grassroots effort. In the end, this talented man only has himself to blame
and the "big
fat check" that he spoke of to spend.
Where was Teresa's outrage when game after game the half-time lead was
blown? Where was Teresa when Steve refused to recruit outside the state?
Where was Teresa when, after it became clear that not only were we no longer
casting a wide net in recruiting, we weren't doing anything about our
defense which had become obvious and porous to all?
Where was Teresa when the faithful clamored for answers, only to get
arrogance from a coach who, although hampered by an arrogant athletic
director, didn't have the ability to communicate? Where was Teresa when
David Garrard seemingly didn't grow in his talent as a quarterback and
played as a senior the same as he did when a sophomore?
Where was Teresa? I don't know, perhaps with "Waldo," but maybe she
forgot to voice her outrage then when Pirates were outraged. The current
effort is hampered by years of poor recruiting and a new coaching staff that
had to go back and teach these players fundamentals that they'd never gotten
because they were learning new "trick" plays that no one was tricked by.
My conscience is clear and Teresa's patience and understanding is needed
while this new regime brings order to what had become nonfunctioning chaos.
Greg Zittel
ECU Alumnus
New York, NY
Mark Griffin
October 12, 2003
I thought
Teresa Morris's letter was
right on the mark. I too was outraged when
Steve Logan was fired. I sent
letters to the since-departed AD and others as well.
Although I believe John Thompson will ultimately be successful, the
damage done to our program will take years to reverse. The damage was not in
the win and loss column but the substance of the program. We sold out like
other college football programs have done and in the process we lost what
made Pirate football something to be passionate about.
Steve Logan understood Eastern North Carolina, he understood what this
university means to Eastern North Carolina — the struggle for respect, the
hard fought battles and the ultimate success. That has been wiped out by
simple greed. Winning by writing checks and by ignoring loyalty is no win at
all.
And one last thing, let's have our new chancellor concentrate on East
Carolina University and not so much on football. We do not need anymore
black eyes because of our greed for football.
Mark Griffin (ECU '88)
Raleigh, NC
Teresa Morris
October 10, 2003
Back in my day, East Carolina had a coach that changed the face of Pirate
football. Coach “Stas” took our out-of-the-way farming and fishing region’s
team to a new level that doubters across I-95 thought impossible. When he
stepped off the field in 1969, he left some mighty big shoes to fill.
In ’92, ECU finally found a coach who could fill those shoes, Steve
Logan. Logan was more than a football coach. He was a role model, he inspired
people and he made himself one with the community.
Logan believed in East Carolina — not just the school, but the region. He
made a point to pick the best he could from East Carolina high schools, even
the most rural ones. Earning a shot to play for HIS team became a real
motivation for boys throughout the region to strive to be one of the chosen
ones.
My son, Sam, attended Logan's football camp a couple of summers ago. He
dreamt of one day suiting up for the Pirates. But at the end of last year, I
saw my boy's soul-desire to play football for ECU evaporate... learning
Coach Logan would no longer be there to lead the team… and discerning no
logical reason for such a drastic upheaval.
Logan had been the coach since Sam was old enough to know what football was.
He was a tradition at East Carolina. When he left, that tradition, sadly,
went with him.
So tell me... where's the collective conscience of ECU fans, knowing they
played a part, by their silence, in letting Logan be pushed aside by
bureaucratic manipulators, now departed and discredited? Where was the cry
of support? The outrage?
Unlike some before him, Logan didn’t abandon East Carolina when he
achieved success. Yet, when he hit a bump in the road, he was cast aside...
and those in a position to stop it stood by and let it happen.
At best, it was a stupid move by ECU administrators. At worst, it was a
malicious one.
So here's what I think... ECU fans — especially you old-timers who can
actually relate to the legacy of Stas — should raise a ruckus that can’t be
ignored. As Pirate fans we need to exercise our backbones rather than just
picking at a wishbone.
We need to start a grassroots movement — something as simple as a
petition drive — to do what might seem impossible — BRING BACK LOGAN!
If that doesn’t work, we should look to California for lessons on what to
do about arrogant, incompetent, indifferent or out-of-touch leadership.
I honestly think we can right this wrong if WE BELIEVE.
Teresa Morris
Emerald Isle, NC
[ Note: The submission did not meet all of the published guidelines for Letters
to the Editor. It exceeds the suggested limit of 250 words. In this case, however, Bonesville.net has made an exception
in the spirit which this open forum is intended to nurture on behalf of all
sides of a controversial issue.
Such exceptions will be rare and shall always be made solely at the
discretion of the editor. — Editor]
Phil Garvin
October 3, 2003
Isn't it time we stop talking about, hoping and praying for Big East
membership?
We need to realize just who we are and where we belong. We are a regional
institution in a small market. Even if we make the case for our market
including cities such as Raleigh, and regions such as southern Virginia, the
case could easily be made that those markets are diluted by the number of
other institutions that are within the same market.
HASN"T EAST CAROLINA FOOTBALL BEEN GREAT BECAUSE OF OUR FANS AND OUR
SUPPORT? WHY ARE WE SO CONCERNED WITH HOW THE REST OF THE WORLD PERCEIVES
US?
If we concentrate on supporting our team, then recruits will come here
because our stadium is full and our fans are supportive. If the recruits
come here, then we will win and be successful. East Carolina, like Southern
Miss, has always been about playing good football and enjoying the college
atmosphere.
The hell with the Big East, the ACC and the BCS. We may not get rich in
Conference USA, but we have a good, competitive conference that will
continue to upset the big boys.
C'mon people, isn't that the essence of East Carolina. Let N.C. State and
UNC think we are lower class. That's what makes it so much fun when we beat
them.
Phil Garvin (ECU '89)
Cherry Hill, NJ
Shannon Boling
October 1, 2003
Hello, Pirate fans! I had an opportunity to watch the Houston ballgame
and to pick out a positive. I would have to say that I was impressed with
the defense. I know we gave up the long ball for a TD twice, and then
towards the end, the speed option, which we all know went for 6.
But, the guys on defense were out on the field a long, long time. Three
and out always helps, but I'd prefer those situations occur on defense, not
our offense!
For all of the Pirates out there who have been on the losing end AND have
to suit back up and practice and prepare for the remainder of the season, its
is very difficult. I know its going to be a long road to recovery, but we
owe it to the players and to the future of Pirate athletics to stay positive
and support them.
Shannon Boling (ECU '89)
Football Letterman ('85-'88)
Asheville, NC
Robert W. McDowell
September 26, 2003
As a proud East Carolina alumnus and a dual football season-ticket holder
at ECU and UNC-Chapel Hill, I have attended 6-12 games yearly for the past
30 years. I have seen the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of college football in
North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and Georgia. But I have never seen
anything quite as Pitiful as the 2003 Pirates: four games, four drubbings;
outscored 160 to 29.
In just 20 days under new coach John Thompson, the Pirates have gone from
being a perennial Conference USA championship contender to being the
laughingstock of Division 1-A. Whatever Steve Logan's faults were as a
coach, at least his teams were COMPETITIVE.
Benching last year's starting quarterback, blue-chip recruit Paul Troth,
in favor of Desmond Robinson is a real head-scratcher. Robinson bobbles
center snaps, botches handoffs, fumbles the ball on contact, and throws
SEVEN interceptions and ZERO touchdown passes in four games. What does he
have to do to lose his job?
With Robinson at quarterback, ECU probably has only ONE chance to win
this season — if the Army Cadets self-destruct Oct. 18 in the battle between
the two weakest sisters in C-USA. Otherwise, 0-12 is a distinct possibility.
Replacing Steve Logan with John Thompson was the worst personnel decision
since Eddie Fisher dumped Debbie Reynolds for Elizabeth Taylor. If ECU
doesn't show DRAMATIC improvement in the next eight games, I say FIRE
Thompson. Why let the John Thompson Pirates become the football equivalent
of the Les Robinson Wolfpack?
Robert W. McDowell (ECU '70)
Raleigh, NC
LEE ALLEN
September 11, 2003
Coach Logan never lost to Miami and he never played them in Greenville.
Enough said.
Lee Allen (ECU '89)
Greenville, NC
GREG ZITTEL
September 10, 2003
Army Officer Bob Jones takes a
long distance view from Germany,
saying that hiring John Thompson was a mistake, and his opinion is far from
the truth. In the same day, Al Myatt uses a cheap attention getting
technique
for his article by first implying
that it would have been better to keep Logan, and ending his piece by saying
it is better to focus on the future.
For those who forgot, we were in a slide for up
to five years and Logan had refused to recruit out of state. Our slide had
become predictable and inevitable. Logan sealed his own fate and firing him
was clearly the right thing to do.
Now, operating with Logan's players, and
teaching new systems on offense and defense, JT hasn't performed any
miracles and some are screaming like stuck pigs.
We're all in pain. This isn't going to be an
easy transition. But using Logan as a cure, and threatening JT after two
games is hysterical and gives EC's enemies just reason to criticize us.
Suck it up, show up, sign up, and cough up.
This is a time for each Pirate's strengths, not weaknesses.
Greg Zittel (ECU alumnus)
New York, NY
BOB JONES
September 7, 2003
(Editor's note: This letter was addressed to Denny O'Brien.)
Denny,
I am an Army Officer stationed in Germany
(ECU Class of '89). Letting Steve Logan go was a huge mistake. Coach Logan
gave Pirate fans everywhere a great program and something to be proud about.
My gut feeling on Coach Thompson will be two miserable seasons and he will
resign, but the real long term damage will be the ECU football program will
take so many steps backwards it will take the new coach years to turn the
(pirate) ship around.
Well, I retire in 2009 and will make my home
in Eastern N.C. I hope by then there is something in Dowdy-Ficklen to be
proud of.
Bob Jones
Major, U.S. Army
Wurzburg, Germany
TED DUNLAP
July 29, 2003
(Editor's note: This letter was addressed to Brian Bailey.)
Hi, Brian,
My name is Ted Dunlap and though we've met a few times, you probably
wouldn't remember me (though if you ever read Boneyard Banter, I post as
Annapolis Pirate).
I wanted to take a quick moment and tell you how much I enjoyed your
article today on Bonesville.net
about high school football. As we
transition through our adult lives, it is nice to look back on some of our
formative years with a smile. Your wistful remembrance made me think of some
of my own fun times in high school (the Old Rose High) and at ECU. Thanks
for writing such vivid prose that causes your readers to share a smile or a
tear. A very nice change of pace from some of the overdone sports stories of
the summer.
By the way, your writing reminded me of a noted boating/sailing author
named Chris Caswell. He has recurring articles in Sailing magazine as well
as others. If you ever have the chance to read his work, I hope you will
take my comparison as a very sincere compliment.
Keep up the good work!
Ted Dunlap
Edgewater, MD
DAVE ENGLERT
June 14, 2003
With regard to the
letter from Greg Zittel concerning
the atmosphere at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium and the cost of tickets, I would
like to hear more about what caused him to come to that conclusion.
I've attended all but four Pirate home games since 1971, and have
attended road games at a minimum of 25 other colleges in those 32 years, and
that is certainly not my impression. Yes, there is occasionally some
excessive drinking, but it is rare. I would not hesitate for one second to
report someone to the stadium security if they were a problem.
As far as the cost, tickets cost less for East Carolina home games than
what I pay to go to watch ECU at places like West Virginia, Virginia Tech,
Duke, UNC, and Miami, for example. It is certainly an expensive hobby, no
doubt. With six kids, I can appreciate some interest by Mr. Zittel in lower
prices. Until we are selling out our stadium, perhaps ECU could consider one
section for family discount tickets, or establish one game for a family
discount.
Dave Englert
Chesapeake, VA
[
Click here to view
the Letter to the Editor to which Mr. Englert's comments are directed. It
was submitted June 10, 2003, by Greg Zittel. — Editor ]
GREG ZITTEL
June 10, 2003
I have a question and you guys are the authority. Why would there be a
sentiment by a Pirate alum that says he and his six children aren't welcome
to Dowdy-Ficklen due to the drunken demeanor of the fans, alums and
students, as well as the cost of the tics?
Is there no family deal? Is there no decent respect for Pirate families
who might want to enthrall their kids in Pirate magic? Hope to hear from you
on this.
Greg Zittel
New York, NY
[ During his days as a student at East Carolina, Greg reports that he
played football for Coach Clarence Stasavich's Pirates in 1965. Responses
from readers, especially from ECU athletic department officials who might be
able to satisfy Greg's query, are welcomed in this 'Letters'
forum. — Editor ]
BRUCE LEVITT
May 21, 2003
I just wanted to say that I thought
Danny Whitford's article on the ACC-Big East mess
was dead on and extremely well written. As a Syracuse alum and big sports
fan living in Georgia, it would be exciting to have my team playing in the
region, but this whole episode is disgusting.
It hurts to have your enthusiasm for college sports steadily chipped away
by dishonesty, stupidity and greed. At some point there will be no
enthusiasm left to chip. I am hoping against hope that the Big East teams
involved step up and say "bite me" to the ACC.
Bruce Levitt
Syracuse '71
Atlanta, GA
PAUL HUTCHINS
April 29, 2003
My name is Paul Hutchins. I played football at East Carolina from
1964-68. I also was an assistant coach for the 1968 freshman football team,
assisting Bill Cain.
I like your website and articles very much, visiting it daily. I have a
complaint though, too many pop up ads. Some of the ads are very hard to
delete. Please clean up your act.
Paul Hutchins
Poolesville, MD
[ It's always a pleasure to hear from a former Pirate football player,
especially one from the Stasavich era. Regarding the pop up ads, we realize
it is an annoyance at times. But the alternative for us — considering the
substantial costs involved in operating Bonesville.net — is to start
charging a subscription fee. Input from readers would be welcomed about the
pros and cons of a reasonable subscription fee that would enable us to
deep-six the pop-up ads. — Editor ]
Let me begin by saying that I enjoy your site very much and thanks for
all the effort to bring news and insight on topics of Pirate sports to the
ECU faithful. I live in Fayetteville and subscribe to The Fayetteville
Observer newspaper for which Sammy Batten writes. This letter to you is
in response to Mr. Batten's column on Saturday March 8th in The
Fayetteville Observer.
Mr Batten's column was titled "Regionals Need Change of Scenery",
regarding the Eastern Regionals basketball tournament. Mr. Batten purposed
that the regionals should be moved to Fayetteville or Wilmington because and
I quote: "15 years is long enough for one city or school to get the
exposure, economic benefits and prestige from conducting such an event."
I encourage you to go online and read the entire article at
www.fayettevillenc.com/sports. I emailed Mr. Batten to express my
disagreement with his article and will be happy to furnish the text of this
email if you so desire.
Mr. Batten certainly has the right to express his opinions in the forum
of his column for his employer. However I find it disturbing that a
contributing columnist for your web site would propose an idea to the public
which I feel would be a disservice to ECU and Greenville, and to fail to
also publish that idea on Bonesville.
I believe that moving the only event that the NCHSAA throws ECU's way
(while leaving the football and basketball championships with the ACC
schools and all it brings to them) is not only unfair but shows a certain
lack of understanding of a bigger reality.
I hope you will consider asking Mr. Batten to be honest enough to post
the column he wrote for the Fayetteville paper on your web site. I feel
journalistic integrity and fairness demands it.